Has the Dow Jones made its final high?

This market is starting to get interesting from a bearish perspective – again. As you know, my background view is this: I expect the US stock markets to complete their five-year-plus rallies, and then suffer huge down moves to below the March 2009 lows. That is my background scenario.

If I am correct, then a well-timed short trade should pay handsome dividends that could grow over many months in a short-and-hold trade. These are very unusual for a swing trader, as my normal trades last anywhere from a few days to only a few weeks.

Locating the tops over the past few months has been very tough, I confess. But I have been successful in identifying several temporary tops along the way – and taking decent profits on the down swings – but every time, the markets have swung back up and made new highs. It has been a little frustrating, to say the least!

Every time the market has made a new high and then moved down off that high, I become encouraged with the prospect – this could be the big one!

But now, I have some very good evidence (although not conclusive) that this last push up was the final thrust which kicks off the big move down.

After taking the profit on my latest short trade, the market roared back up to confirm the A-B-C pattern, but crucially, has not made a new high. The closing high on the Dow remains the December 31 high at 16,600. Basically, the market has gone nowhere in four months.

How I know when a bull trend is ending

This was the hourly chart I showed last time:

Since the market bounced up off the lowest tramline, the move down was in reality an A-B-C and not a 1, 2, 3 of a five-wave pattern, as I first suspected. The rally carried above the wave 2 high last week and that move cancelled out my five motive waves suggestion.

Why am I so keen on finding a motive pattern down off a high? It is simply because a five-wave move with the right characteristics is the clue that the bull trend is likely over. That is standard Elliott wave theory. If I can identify that pattern, I may well have identified the start of a big wave down.

What are the right characteristics? I need to see a long and strong third wave and a clear division into three waves down and two counter-trend waves up. I would also like to see a positive-momentum divergence at the wave 5 low. This could show up on the hourly chart or even the 15-minute chart.

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The perfect low-risk trade

On Thursday, this is what I found on the 15-minute chart:

There was a gap created on the way up from a bullish Ukraine break-through reaction.

But look at what happened shortly thereafter – the market made a slight new high and broke sharply in five clear waves with my wave 3 long and very strong, then a new low in wave 5 and a large positive-momentum divergence there. Perfect!

Because I was anticipating this break, I entered a sell order on the break of support in the 16,530 area with protective stop just above the high at 16,570 for a very low risk of 40 pips.

Remember, I am only interested in low-risk trades – trades where I can place a sensible stop-loss a small distance away from entry. This one fits the bill beautifully.

We’ve only had three waves down so far

The other terrific low-risk entry point was the wave 4 high, which was a typical move back up to kiss the underside of the resistance zone (formerly support). This was a textbook example of how support zones turn into resistance after a break.

On Friday, the market moved even lower and that caused me to re-assess my Elliott wave labels. Now, I have a clear motive wave pattern forming:

The first thrust down is my new wave 1, the rally to pink resistance is wave 2 and the very long and strong wave down is wave 3. Note the positive-momentum divergence that warned of a likely bounce.

And late on Friday, the market made a small correction which is part of wave 4. As I write this morning, the market is extending higher in wave 4.

Now, wave 4 has two options as I see it.

The first option is that the market declines immediately below the wave 3 low in wave 5. The other option is for wave 4 to develop more to the upside before then moving down to new lows in wave 5.

Eagle-eyed readers will have spotted that we have only three waves down so far – just as we did in mid-April (see 14 April post). So the possibility remains that this is just another corrective A-B-C before new highs are attempted.

Confirmation of a five-wave pattern would be provided if the market moves much below the wave 3 low at the 15,330 area. This is my line in the sand. And if we do have an A-B-C, the rally will carry above the 16,450 area. That would be a sensible place to lower the protective stop.

Will the bears be roaring in pain or pleasure?

This is a good time to go to the long-term daily chart to keep us on the rails (pun intended):

Here is my excellent tramline quartet. The two recent lows are touch points on T1 and the recent rallies have made kisses on T2. T3 has the December 31 high as a kiss touch point and T4 has the notorious 22 May spike high touch point.

The key resistance area is the 16,600 area marked in pink. A break above that would set the bears roaring – in pain. But a break of T1 would make them roar – in pleasure.

If you’re a new reader, or need a reminder about some of the methods I refer to in my trades, then do have a look at my introductory videos:

Fascinating as always John.
Dow to go down to March 09 lows – quite a prediction – I hope you’re right!

Bronco Bill

John, I day/swing trade the Dow to earn a crust but also look for a long-term trade/investment either on the long or short side.
I have to admit that I closed out my last long-term (long) trade in February which I had held since June 2009 and am now ready to go in on what I believe will be on the (short) side this time around.
The long-term monthly chart points to the Dow topping out this year but I’m not going in just yet. Unlike yourself I use moving averages for day trading and the for the long-term, and as yet no signal has been given, plus the Dow is still holding above a support line drawn from the 2000 and 2007 highs.
For myself I will be taking a closer look again when this support is taken out t/w the MA’s even if I miss out on a couple of hundred points no matter.
It’s times like these when I recall ol’ Jesse’s wise words…. “One of the most helpfull things that anybody can learn is to give up trying to catch the last eighth – or the first.

anne

Dear John, daily chart shows what looks like the formation of a broadening triangle which at market tops signals bear. however this would be negated if you are looking at a complete first wave. depends how you count the waves. anne.